Fit 'e gan?
Excuse me?
Ah dinnae want te fecht!
Ah…me neither Besoeker, I think I’m beginning to pick this up
Charles Murray (27 September 1864 – 12 April 1941) was a poet who wrote in the Doric dialect of Scots.
I find the Australian Accent on my sister really strange, she went out there years ago just after she got married. I always dissolve into giggles at her (but out of slapping range) if she’s here in Scotland for a visit.
She finds it strange that I still have my sing song lyrical Western Isles Brogue, but I never lost it, despite being on the Mainland for so long.
I love all accents - although I sometimes have problems understanding them! One of my neighbours is Italian and when she gets excited and talks fast I really can’t follow what she is saying. My favourite accent is Southern Irish - but I could be prejudiced as I had the good sense to marry a man from Southern Ireland!
On the back of my daughter’s Jimney is a sign which says, “Welcome to Ken Barra”
Apparently that was the automatic sub title translation of the commentator saying, “Welcome to Canberra” on a live footie broadcast (presumably the Canberra Raiders)
I am proud to say that I translated it before you wrote that it was Canberra.
I guess that makes me bilingual now!
Love that one. Surprising.
she’s my type of woman wherever she comes from - I definitely like discipline??
I understand the Australian accent is derived from the cockney accent because of the number of convicts who were sent there from London.
There is another theory.People from different parts of the UK had never mixed together before. And the Aussie accent is an amalgamation of all the many different regional accents.
Including my ancestors Fine convict stock
Hi Bret…absolutely they had the pioneer spirit
I don’t find the Aussi accent weird except on one of my sisters who went out there years ago, she had a real Scottish Burr before she left.
Plenty more to send!
Not sure if they have cockney accents anymore…